November 2, 2024
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene laid out a number of parameters for agreeing to fund the "Biden regime's weaponized government."

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene laid out a number of parameters for agreeing to fund the “Biden regime’s weaponized government.”

Speaking to her constituents at Floyd County Town Hall in Georgia, Greene announced that she would not vote to fund the government unless a number of conditions were passed. She demanded an impeachment inquiry against President Joe Biden, defunding of special prosecutors targeting former President Donald Trump, eliminating all COVID-19 vaccine mandates, and ending funding for Ukraine.

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“I will not vote to fund the government unless we have passed an impeachment inquiry on Joe Biden,” Greene declared.

“I will not fund the government, because I will not fund the weaponized part of the government. I’m not going to continue to fund the Biden regime’s weaponized government, so there should be no funding for Jack Smith’s Special Counsel.”


“We have to fire David Weiss, who is protecting Hunter Biden on his special counsel, and we have to rein in the FBI,” she continued. “I will not vote for money to go towards those things.”

Greene went on to say that she would also require an end to COVID-19 vaccine and mask mandates as a requirement to fund the government.

“And lastly, my red line in the sand has always been, I will not vote to fund a war in Ukraine,” she said. “We have to have peace. So I will be happy to work with all of my colleagues. I will work with the Speaker of the House. I will work with everyone. But I will not fund those things.”

Greene has been one of the most vocal proponents of impeaching Biden since soon after he took office.

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House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) announced on Wednesday that he believes the House will go forward with an impeachment of Joe Biden after much deliberation.

“There’s consensus in our conference now that we are going to have to go to the impeachment inquiry,” he said in an appearance on Fox News. “Obviously, that will be Speaker McCarthy’s call, but I feel like we’re there now … I feel like that is imminent.”

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